Global strength, local hesitation
Australian markets traded in a tighter, more cautious range through 20 to 24 April 2026, and while global indices continued pushing into record territory on resilient earnings and easing geopolitical noise, the ASX 200 struggled to hold early strength and ultimately closed near 8,786, broadly flat after briefly testing levels above 8,950 earlier in the week.
The tone felt different from the earlier relief rally, because although global sentiment remained constructive and risk appetite held up across US and European markets, local investors rotated more selectively within sectors, leaning into quality and stability while trimming exposure to miners and more volatile cyclicals as commodity momentum softened without a clear new catalyst.
Aussie Indexes
Financials helped stabilise the index as rate expectations softened slightly at the margin, while materials and healthcare weighed on performance as gold pulled back and sector-specific pressures built, and at the same time technology edged higher, although its weighting remains too small to shift the broader index direction in a meaningful way.
| Index / Sector | Weekly Move (20–24 Apr 2026) |
|---|---|
| S&P/ASX 200 | ~0.0% (flat) |
| ASX 200 Financials | ~+0.3% |
| ASX 200 Materials | ~-1.0% |
| ASX 200 Healthcare | ~-2.5% |
| ASX 200 Energy (XPO) | Mixed / neutral |
| ASX 200 Info Tech | ~+0.5–1% |
That internal rotation matters. Banks responded to softer rate expectations. Miners reacted to weaker metals pricing.
Global Indexes
Global markets continued to reinforce a clean risk-on narrative, with US indices extending gains into record or near-record territory as earnings surprised to the upside and macro volatility remained contained, while Europe held steady and Asian markets benefited from structural reform themes and ongoing export strength.
| Index | Weekly Move (approx) |
|---|---|
| S&P 500 | +0.8% |
| Dow Jones | ~+0.6% |
| Nasdaq 100 | ~+1.0% |
| FTSE 100 | ~-0.2% |
| DAX | ~+0.3% |
| Nikkei 225 | ~+0.7% |
The signal was consistent. Global markets stayed engaged in risk. Australia remained more selective.
ASX Big Movers
Friday trading highlighted how selective and liquidity-driven the local market has become, with sharp moves concentrated in small-cap names where thinner volumes tend to exaggerate both upside momentum and downside pressure, particularly into the end of the week.
Top 5 Gainers (24 Apr)
| Rank | Code | Company | Close | Daily Move |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | JCS | Jcurve Solutions Ltd | $0.045 | +50.00% |
| 2 | NOX | Noxopharm Ltd | $0.097 | +29.33% |
| 3 | 8CO | 8COMMON Ltd | $0.021 | +23.53% |
| 4 | HTG | Harvest Technology Group | $0.017 | +21.43% |
| 5 | CMB | Cambium Bio Ltd | $0.32 | +20.76% |
Top 5 Losers (24 Apr)
| Rank | Code | Company | Close | Daily Move |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | BOE | Boss Energy Ltd | $1.91 | -43.97% |
| 2 | SEQ | Sequoia Financial Group | $0.24 | -28.89% |
| 3 | NIM | Nimy Resources Ltd | $0.068 | -25.28% |
| 4 | SMM | Somerset Minerals Ltd | $0.014 | -22.22% |
| 5 | D3E | D3 Energy Ltd | $0.27 | -20.59% |
Resource names dominated the downside, led by a sharp move in uranium exposure, while gains skewed toward micro-cap and biotech names where momentum remains highly tactical and often disconnected from broader index direction.
Commodities
Commodity markets remained constructive overall, although the intensity of prior moves faded, with oil stabilising rather than extending higher and precious metals easing, which created a more neutral backdrop for Australian resource equities and reduced some of the urgency that had driven earlier positioning.
| Commodity | Price (approx) | Weekly Move |
|---|---|---|
| Brent crude | ~$106/bbl | Slight + |
| WTI crude | ~$100–103/bbl | Slight + |
| Gold (spot) | ~$2,350/oz | ~-1.5–2% |
| Silver | ~$28.50/oz | ~-2–3% |
| Copper (LME) | ~$6.02/lb | ~-0.8% |
| Iron ore (CIF) | ~$107.10/t | ~+0.04% |
The shift was subtle. Oil panic faded. Metals lost momentum.
Currencies
The Australian dollar moved modestly higher toward 0.6550 against the US dollar, reflecting improved global risk sentiment and some support from commodity pricing, although the move does not yet point to a broader structural shift in currency markets or capital flows.
Key Stories Driving the Week
The market narrative was shaped less by new shocks and more by digestion of earlier moves, with US earnings continuing to beat expectations, oil stabilising after geopolitical concerns eased, and Australian investors reassessing positioning after the early April rebound.
There was no single catalyst driving markets this week. Instead, multiple smaller factors reinforced stability.
Market Takeaway
This week highlighted a clear divergence between global strength and local hesitation, where international markets continued to price in earnings resilience and macro stability, while the ASX shifted into a more selective phase where sector positioning mattered more than broad index exposure.
The implication for investors is straightforward. Global markets are rewarding growth and quality. The ASX is demanding selectivity.
If this dynamic persists, portfolio construction becomes more important than passive exposure, because the gap between global leaders and domestic laggards is no longer just cyclical, it is increasingly structural and driven by sector composition, macro settings, and capital flows.